With quarterback clearly not the most interesting position for the UL Ragin’ Cajuns entering the spring football season, which position battles are worthy of the most attention during the offseason?
For the first time in the Michael Desormeaux era, the starting quarterback was a done deal heading into spring.
So for fans wondering where to shift their focus, there are several options available.
One good place to start is at running back.
Last year’s leading rushers — Bill Davis and Zylan Perry — are now gone, which opens the door for new leaders to emerge.
Redshirt sophomore Steven Blanco probably leads the parade, but redshirt freshman Darrell Smith is expected to carry a much larger load this season and 5-10, 210-pound redshirt freshman JJ Garner also appears ready to impress.
“Steven played really well for us last year,” UL coach Michael Desormeaux said. “Whenever he got in there, he had really good carries, had good production.
“Darrell didn’t have many carries … but we’ve seen a lot from him throughout the course of last year and his growth. I think Darrell’s going to be a really good player.”
Fans may remember Garner carrying a group of defenders into the end zone for a score in last year’s spring game.
“JJ Garner is probably one of the best athletes in that group, and that’s saying a lot to me,” Desormeaux said. “That group is really talented.”
And certainly don’t overlook Howard transfer Anthony Reagan.
“He’s come in and he’s got a different gear,” Desormeaux said of Reagan. “We haven’t seen him in pads yet, but he’s competing and making plays.”
Another key area on offense with even more questions on the depth chart is wide receiver.
Yes, Shelton Sampson returns as Winfield’s No. 1 target, but there’s nothing set in stone after him.
The addition of catch-and-run guys like Russell Babineaux and Trenton Chaney shifts the skill set of Winfield’s targets.
“We really haven’t had the ball-in-hand guy a whole lot — that has a little wiggle and makes you miss, really, since Ryheem Malone (2014-18),” Desormeaux said.
The coaching staff has been waiting on redshirt junior KeDarius Wade to take that big step for two seasons and is hoping this is the year.
Lance Strother was a steady force last season and remains in the plan. Rahji Dennis enters his third season and keep an eye on return specialist Ja’Corian Norris moving from defense to receiver.
“He is a really talented athlete who didn’t quite click on defense,” Desormeaux said. “It didn’t click for a guy named JaMarcus Bradley either, so we moved him to offense and he ended up being a darn good football player.”
Perhaps the trickiest position is at inside linebacker. Redshirt senior Kailep Edwards is back, but he’s had very few starts in his career.
Jake St. Andre established himself last season, but such developing players as redshirt junior Micah Johnson and redshirt sophomores Ethan Veal and Connor McPherson will have to take their turn.
“There’s a bunch of competition in that room, just not a lot of experience in the game,” Desormeaux said. “Every year, we’ve kind of had to do that a little bit … coach (Scott) Stoker does a good job with those guys.”
Another position in a similar position is cornerback. The staff and fan base were both elated when sophomore Brent Gordon returned.
After him, there’s a list of unproven options and several of those will need to step up. That group includes redshirt sophomore Avery Demery, redshirt junior Curley Reed, redshirt junior Jeremiah Moses and perhaps redshirt freshman Kevin Malone.
“Avery Demry is a guy that I think is as talented as any of the guys we’ve had here,” Desormeaux said. “Jeremiah Moses is competing really hard right now and it’s time for him. He’s competing really hard, got a really good skill set. He can run. He’s competing the right way.”
And Malone is “one that I’m excited about as a redshirt freshman. He’s kind of in that Eric Garror and Keyon Martin mold — little, but he’s a scrappy dog.”